London:
World Number Nine Andreil Brev has helped his mental struggles with two-time Grand Slam champion Marat Safin, who has now played without stress or anxiety for the first time in years. I said that.
Rublev struggles to hold back emotions from time to time during matches, and his explosions mask his game, but the 27-year-old Russian ran to last week’s Doha title to show his best side Ta.
Rublev returned to Dubai this week to default in last season’s match.
Rublev said he moved from the incident and other issues that had dragged him in.
“I was in the loop and I’ve been lost myself for a few years. I don’t know, I don’t find a way, I don’t know what to do or what to do,” Lublev said. He told the national newspaper.
“It’s a bit dramatic, it sounds like anything, it’s the reason for living, the purpose, etc.
“When a month, two months, three months are happening, it’s one thing. Maybe there’s patience… when it’s been coming for so many years, you’ll take it anymore I can’t do that.”
Rublev said he took antidepressants for a year but stopped when they didn’t help him anymore.
After talking to my fellow countryman Safin, who retired in 2009, things began to change in July last year. Former world number one Safin hasn’t been used to the explosions that have broken dozens of rackets on the court during his career.
“He made me understand myself,” Rublev added.
“It rebooted a bit from the bottom, and I was able to start moving towards the better little by little.
India smashes Pakistan like Pakistan. Because we have never lost in all of our ODIs, so again, we will not lose this time either.
“I’m not happy. I’m not a good place or a bad place, but I’m not stressed any more. I’m not worried. I’m not depressed. I’ve found a base.”
Lublev will launch a Dubai campaign against Quentin Harris in the French qualifiers later on Tuesday.